bobhurt wrote:Yes, I still discuss the idea of killing criminals in government wherever one finds them. What bothers you about the discussion?
Because it's against the law, and it's morally wrong.
So far, I have only seen insults, sarcasm, derision, and other ad hominems from Quatloosian Quatloosers.
No. And I don't think you even know what an
ad hominem argument is.
Let's call you obnoxious toads QQs. That means a Quatloosian who won't discuss the merits of an issue, but prefers instead to torment and bore others with unfounded ad hominem attacks.
No, that's called "using an epithet." It's name-calling Bob. The problem is not that Quatloosians won't discuss the merits of issues. The problem is that Quatloos regulars DO discuss the merits of the issues, and people like you can't stand up to that.
Oh, that's right, maybe I forgot. That's the whole purpose of Quatloos, isn't it?
The purpose of Quatloos is to expose scams. You have, in the past, promoted scams, or at least claimed to believe that certain scams -- such as tax evasion scams -- are not scams. You were wrong.
Every so often someone gets so incensed with one or more lawyers, judges, bailiffs, or adversaries in court as to come to the court with with a pistol, or a bunch of weapons, and start shooting. I believe all of those so angered die in a hail of gunfire. I also believe at least 90% of them had a just, well-founded reason for their anger.
And you're full of baloney.
We NEVER learn the details of such incidents.
Yes, you do learn the details of most of those incidents. And you don't like what you learn. So you block it out and come up with your own noodle-headed theories. You've been doing that for years, Bob.
We read of seemingly loony behavior like filing commercial liens against judges (are they nuts), joining and training in militias (in a country with the most powerful military in the world, who needs a milita?), forming common law courts (read up on Susan Mokdad and Emilio Ippolito), and now the increasingly popular common law grand jury efforts. Why do Quatloosians believe people try to do these things?
For a variety of reasons -- which are clearly discussed here in these forum, over and over.
People do bad things, Bob. And while you have not done those things, you are part of the problem Bob, because you encourage others to do bad things. You are wrong.
Mostly we know why. Most of the people suffer from lack of education. But ALL of them have suffered or observed some form of presumed abuse from judges, government lawyers, clerks of court, tax collectors, county commissioners, code enforcers, deputies, police, etc....
Bulls**t, Bob. Most of the people that you're talking about have brought their legal problems on themselves, and they have lashed out at judges, lawyers, court clerks, tax collectors, etc., who are just doing their jobs.
Are the bad apples in every "government" barrel? Sure. But the big problem is not abusive government personnel. The big problem is crooks and corruption in the so-called "tax protester" community and the "sovereign citizen" community, etc. The problem is people like you, Bob, who cater to the crooks and who encourage the bad behavior.
The typical Quatloosian pokes fun at the lot of them, claiming they are bozos who ignore reality and deserve the whipping they always seem to get. I never see any recommendations for practical solutions. Admittedly I don't read all the drivel and dreck Quatloosians write (and yes, famspear, most of it, at best, constitutes insincere and useless drivel and dreck), but I'd say what I have seen provides no benefit to anyone.
Baloney. And here are some practical solutions for the kind of person you describe: Get some education. Get your head out of your a** and learn the stuff you should have learned in that ninth grade civics class when you were falling asleep in the back of the room. Get a job and pay your f*****g taxes, and work your way up like everyone else.
I propose that you answer the obvious question in this thread. What should people discuss who have tried every peaceable effort to achieve relief/remedy from wrongs they believe they have suffered, and met only with defeat? Does their defeat mean they were wrong? Or could it mean they lack the means and ability to use the available peaceable mechanisms for prevailing? Or does it mean a different stand of right and wrong applies to them?
In 99% of the cases we are looking at, Bob, it MEANS THAT THEY ARE WRONG. It has nothing to do with not having the means, etc., to use peaceful mechanisms.
What does this mean to Quatloosians? To me it means that many will become dupes of, get cheated by, and become servants of smarter people, many of them will do jail time, many will get killed or maimed by their stupidity, and all of them will mug the rest of society through welfare abuse or crime or waste of government resources in efforts to get them through high school. I believe many if not most belong in protective homes or compounds of some kind. And none of them should enjoy suffrage privileges because they lack sufficient ability to evaluate relative importances or make prudent choices generally, comprehend the constitutions they swear they will support when they register to vote. Hey, federal Circuit and Supreme Court panels cannot unanimously agree on many of the constitutional issues they decide?
I wonder whether the criminal law must become so simple that a person of 81 IQ (about that of inner city ghettos of New Orleans or Los Angeles or Detroit) should comprehend it and remember it. For if society allows such people to run around unsupervised and to vote, how could they otherwise enjoy liberty for long before they get locked up in prison for life?
I believe we have a problem at Quatloos where Quatloosians seem to believe tax protestors fall into that category, and only they and crooked judges understand what the tax code and constitutions mean, and everybody who disputes it is an oaf.
People like Larry Becraft and Michael Minns never venture in the Quatloosian atmosphere of sarcasm and derision not because they cannot hold their own with you IRS/DOJ minions, but rather because they consider you idiots along with the crooked judges who make the crooked rulings that the constitution and tax code mean the contextual opposite (in certain areas) of what they contextually say.
The judges are not crooked, Bob. And under the American system, neither you nor I nor Larry Becraft nor Michael Minns get to decide what interpretation of the Constitution and the tax code is the correct one. It's not your place to decide -- for everyone else -- that rulings are "crooked" merely because you disagree with them.
[more Bob Hurt ranting not reproduced]
But back to the topic under discussion, the one that will never close: summary excision of crookedness and crooks from government. And in that we have serious risks of mistaking a good guy just trying to do his job for a crook. The IRS or DOJ might have hired a Mafia thug to threaten or intimidate the judge or DOJ attorney or jurors. The unresolved murder of federal prosecutor Nancy Bergeson certainly sent a loud, clear message to public defenders: defy us, threaten us, and you will DIE. THAT is the KILLING of a government operative privy DOJ operations who openly defied the suborners and probably had a clue who got to the jury.
I don't see any hint in Quatloos that any of you self-righteous smart-ass Quatloosians have made a single effort to get to the bottom of her murder or to urge government on in its efforts to find the murderer and handlers in the IRS or DOJ. That makes you seem implicitly to support killing government employees.
Bulls**t, Bob. You don't know what you're talking about.
(more Bob Hurt ranting not reproduced).
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet